Our Expert in Vietnam
No results available
Vietnam’s investment law landscape shifted decisively on 1 March 2026 when the Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15 took effect, replacing key provisions of the former 2020 framework and reshaping the compliance obligations of every foreign‑invested enterprise operating in or entering the country. Decree No. 96/2026/ND‑CP, issued on 31 March 2026, added granular implementation rules, from revised conditional business line lists and market access restrictions to a formalised hậu kiểm (post‑inspection) tax regime that fundamentally changes how authorities verify investor compliance after registration.
For general counsel, CFOs and investment managers overseeing FDI projects in sectors ranging from industrial parks to renewable energy, the core compliance question is now threefold: determine whether your business line is prohibited, still conditional, or fully open; map the corresponding approval pathway; and prepare your documentation for post‑inspection scrutiny before an audit notice arrives.
Action now: Every foreign investor with an active or planned project in Vietnam must re‑map its registered business lines against the revised conditional and prohibited lists under Law No. 143/2025 and Decree 96/2026, update its investment registration certificate (IRC) documentation, and build an audit‑ready file to satisfy the new hậu kiểm post‑inspection obligations, ideally within 90 days of the Decree’s effective date.
The Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15 was adopted by the National Assembly on 11 December 2025 and entered into force on 1 March 2026. It amends and replaces significant portions of the 2020 Law on Investment (No. 61/2020/QH14), which had itself consolidated the earlier 2014 regime. The 2025 law targets three structural goals: streamlining market access by reducing the number of conditional business lines, strengthening post‑registration oversight through formalised post‑inspection (hậu kiểm) mechanisms, and clarifying FDI approval procedures for large‑scale projects in priority sectors such as industrial parks, real estate development and energy.
Decree No. 96/2026/ND‑CP, issued by the Government on 31 March 2026, serves as the primary implementing regulation. It specifies the revised negative list of market access restrictions for foreign investors, details the procedural requirements for investment registration and approval, and introduces the hậu kiểm compliance framework that tax and licensing authorities will use when conducting post‑registration inspections. Vietnam’s Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI) retains overall supervisory authority, while provincial Departments of Planning and Investment (DPIs) handle most day‑to‑day registrations and approvals.
Transitional provisions in both the Law and Decree 96 provide that projects already holding valid Investment Registration Certificates (IRCs) issued before 1 March 2026 may continue operating under the terms of their existing certificates until their next scheduled renewal or amendment. However, any material change, including scope expansion, ownership restructuring or business line addition, triggers an obligation to comply with the new requirements. Industry observers expect that the practical effect of this transitional rule is to create a compliance cliff for investors who have deferred restructuring, since any amendment filed after 1 March 2026 will be assessed under the new regime.
| Date | Instrument | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 11 December 2025 | Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15 adopted by National Assembly | New legal text finalised; signals upcoming changes to conditional business lines, FDI approvals and post‑inspection regime |
| 1 March 2026 | Law No. 143/2025 enters into force | Revised prohibited and conditional business line lists become binding; new approval thresholds apply; existing IRCs remain valid until amendment |
| 31 March 2026 | Decree No. 96/2026/ND‑CP issued | Detailed implementing rules for investment registration, hậu kiểm post‑inspection obligations, negative list updates and sectoral documentation requirements take effect |
| Mid‑2026 (verify exact date per Decree) | MPI guidance circulars and updated negative list annexes | Sector‑specific schedules and procedural templates expected; investors should monitor MPI website and official Gazette for publication dates |
The most commercially significant change under the 2025 investment law reform is the reduction of Vietnam’s conditional business line list. Under the previous 2020 framework, foreign investors faced a list of over 200 conditional business lines, activities for which market access was subject to additional licensing, ownership caps or prior approval conditions. Law No. 143/2025 and Decree 96/2026 together remove a substantial number of these conditions, with practitioner analyses indicating that approximately 38 business lines have been delisted or consolidated. The precise scope of removals is set out in the annexes to Decree 96/2026.
To navigate the revised framework, foreign investors must understand the three‑tier classification that now governs market access restrictions:
| Business Line / Sector | Status Under 2020 Law | Status Under 2025 Law & Decree 96/2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Wholesale distribution (general goods) | Conditional, Economic Needs Test (ENT) or licence required | Conditions eased or removed for many categories; verify specific product codes |
| Logistics & freight forwarding | Conditional, foreign ownership cap (typically 49–51%) | Ownership cap retained for certain sub‑sectors; others opened per WTO commitments |
| Real estate brokerage services | Conditional, practitioner licence + capital requirements | Conditions retained; additional post‑inspection documentation now required |
| Manufacturing (food processing sub‑sectors) | Conditional, food safety licence + facility inspection | Conditions largely retained; hậu kiểm audit pathway formalised |
| Energy support services (equipment maintenance, testing) | Conditional, sector licence required | Several sub‑lines removed from conditional list; standard registration now sufficient |
| E‑commerce platforms | Conditional, MOIT registration + data localisation rules | Conditions retained with additional cybersecurity compliance layer |
| Education & training services | Conditional, MOET approval + minimum capital | Conditions retained; Decree 96 clarifies capital evidence requirements |
| Advertising services | Conditional, MOCI licence + foreign ownership cap | Some restrictions eased; verify ownership cap per updated negative list |
| Telecommunication services (value‑added) | Conditional, MIC licence + 49% cap | Ownership caps largely retained per WTO schedule; Decree 96 formalises reporting |
| Environmental services (waste treatment) | Conditional, MONRE licence + technical standards | Conditions retained; post‑inspection compliance requirements expanded |
Foreign investors should map their specific activities to Vietnam’s national industry classification system (VSIC codes), which aligns broadly with the ISIC Rev. 4 framework. The revised negative list under Decree 96/2026 references VSIC codes alongside descriptions of conditional activities and the specific restrictions or conditions that apply. Investors operating in sectors with detailed product or service classifications, such as manufacturing sub‑sectors using HS (Harmonized System) codes for customs purposes, should cross‑reference both their VSIC registration and their HS codes against the Decree 96 annexes.
Where ambiguity exists between a VSIC code description and the actual scope of business operations, the likely practical effect will be that provincial DPIs request clarification documentation, making it essential to have a well‑prepared project scope narrative that links the investor’s activities directly to the relevant codes and the applicable conditions (or the absence thereof) under the updated lists.
One of the most consequential changes for foreign investor compliance under the 2026 reforms is the formalisation of the hậu kiểm (post‑inspection) approach. Under the previous regime, investment authorities conducted a degree of upfront verification at the registration stage, checking capital adequacy, business line eligibility and basic corporate documentation before issuing an IRC. The new framework under Law No. 143/2025 and Decree 96/2026 shifts significant verification responsibility to the post‑registration phase. Authorities grant registration more quickly, but conduct substantive compliance inspections after the enterprise begins operations.
This shift carries material tax and compliance risk. Under the hậu kiểm model, tax authorities, provincial DPIs and sector regulators may conduct inspections at any time during the life of the project to verify that the enterprise’s actual operations match its registered scope, that tax incentives were properly claimed, and that capital contribution schedules have been met. The practical implication is that foreign‑invested enterprises must maintain audit‑ready documentation from day one, rather than assembling it reactively when an inspection notice arrives.
Typical triggers for a hậu kiểm post‑inspection include:
To satisfy hậu kiểm inspection requirements under Decree 96/2026, foreign‑invested enterprises should maintain the following documentation in an accessible, indexed format:
If a hậu kiểm inspection identifies discrepancies, the enterprise typically receives a preliminary inspection report with a deadline to respond, usually 15 to 30 working days, depending on the authority. Best practice is to engage experienced local tax counsel immediately, prepare a written response addressing each finding point‑by‑point with supporting documentation, and, where appropriate, proactively disclose and correct errors before a formal penalty assessment is issued. Voluntary disclosure and correction before a final inspection conclusion generally results in reduced penalties under Vietnam’s tax administration law.
Where the finding relates to business line scope (operating outside the registered activities), the enterprise should simultaneously file for an IRC amendment to regularise its position, while seeking legal advice on whether the relevant activity triggers conditional business line requirements under the revised lists.
The approval workflow for foreign‑invested projects under the 2026 investment law framework varies significantly by sector, project scale and the degree to which Decree 96/2026 has shifted obligations from pre‑approval to post‑registration. This section provides step‑by‑step guidance for three priority sectors where FDI approvals are most complex.
Large‑scale industrial park setup projects typically require in‑principle approval from the Prime Minister or the relevant Provincial People’s Committee (PPC), followed by investment registration with the provincial DPI. Under Decree 96/2026, the documentation requirements for industrial park developers include:
Industry observers expect that Decree 96/2026 reduces the upfront documentation burden slightly by deferring certain detailed technical submissions to the post‑registration stage. However, the hậu kiểm framework means that any documents deferred at registration must be available for inspection at short notice once operations commence.
Real estate development projects attract some of the most complex FDI approval requirements under Vietnam’s investment law, because they intersect with the Land Law, the Housing Law and the Real Estate Business Law. Key compliance considerations under the 2026 framework include:
Energy sector FDI, including independent power producers (IPPs) and renewable energy projects, requires both investment approval and sector‑specific licensing. Under the 2026 regime:
| Project Type | Is Prior Investment Approval Usually Required? | Key Documents / Immediate Compliance Triggers |
|---|---|---|
| Industrial park developer (large‑scale IP) | Often yes, in‑principle approval + investment registration | Investment project proposal, land allocation decision, environmental impact assessment, master plan, capital commitment proof |
| Real estate development (residential / commercial) | Depends on activity, land conversion or foreign sales may trigger approvals | Land use right certificates, zoning approvals, project investor registration, construction permits |
| Energy (IPPs, renewable projects) | Usually approval + sector licences (power purchase arrangements) | Power development plan alignment, PPA draft, environmental permission, technical feasibility, investment registration |
The following prioritised checklist organises the immediate actions that foreign‑invested enterprises and incoming investors should take within the first 90 days following the effective date of Decree 96/2026. Each item addresses a specific compliance obligation under the revised framework.
Within 30 days:
Within 60 days:
Within 90 days:
Industrial park, lost incentive due to scope error. A foreign consortium developing a mid‑scale industrial park in a central Vietnamese province filed for fast‑track CIT incentives based on its IRC, which listed “industrial park infrastructure development” as its primary activity. During a routine post‑inspection review, the DPI determined that the investor was also operating warehousing and logistics services, activities registered under a different VSIC code that did not qualify for the same incentive tier. The CIT incentive was partially revoked for the relevant fiscal years. The lesson: ensure that every revenue‑generating activity is explicitly registered and mapped to the correct incentive eligibility category before operations commence.
Real estate JV, hậu kiểm exposure avoided by early disclosure. A foreign‑invested real estate joint venture discovered, during an internal review triggered by the Decree 96/2026 rollout, that its capital contribution schedule was six months behind the timeline filed with the DPI. Rather than waiting for a post‑inspection notice, the JV proactively filed an amended capital schedule with supporting bank remittance evidence and a written explanation. Early indications suggest that this voluntary correction approach significantly reduces the risk of penalties under the new hậu kiểm framework, compared to enterprises that are found non‑compliant during a formal inspection.
The combined effect of Law No. 143/2025 and Decree 96/2026 is to create a faster registration pathway paired with more rigorous post‑registration enforcement, a trade‑off that demands proactive compliance from every foreign investor. The essential steps are clear: re‑map your business lines against the revised conditional and prohibited lists, update your project dossier and IRC to reflect the current requirements, build and maintain an audit‑ready hậu kiểm file covering tax, corporate and sector documentation, and engage experienced local counsel to close any gaps before the authorities identify them.
Vietnam remains one of the most dynamic FDI destinations in Southeast Asia, and the 2026 reforms are designed to attract investment more efficiently, but only for investors who meet the new standards of foreign investor compliance from the outset.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Than Trong Ly at DIMAC Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 17 minutes ago
posted 18 minutes ago
posted 43 minutes ago
posted 43 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message